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Get Your Rocks Off may refer to: "Get Your Rocks Off", a 1967 Basement Tapes song by Bob Dylan and the Band; Messin', titled Get Your Rocks Off in the US, a 1973 album by Manfred Mann's Earth Band; Get Your Rocks Off, a 2002 album by Eddie and the Hot Rods "Get Your Rocks Off", a 2014 episode of the television series Sex Sent Me to the ER
The song was also their last release for ABC Records before the label merged with MCA Records. [1] The song was also covered by Dave & Sugar, who included it on their 1978 Tear Time album (though they changed the title to "Baby, Take Your Coat Off"). It is not to be confused with the band's 1985 single "Come On In (You Did the Best You Could Do ...
"Rocks" is a song by the Scottish rock band Primal Scream that came out in 1994 with the release of Give Out But Don't Give Up, which was the group's fourth studio album. This track was the first indication of the band's evolution in musical genre , contrasting with the approaches utilized in Primal Scream's previous album, titled Screamadelica ...
On August 14, 1902, William Helms (June 5, 1835 – December 13, 1917), a 67-year-old farmer and Civil War veteran, was walking along the St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railway (later the Missouri Pacific Railroad) where it crosses Big River outside of Irondale (Washington County, Missouri), collecting lumber for a barn he intended to build.
Messin' is a rock album released in 1973 by Manfred Mann's Earth Band. "Buddah" also appeared on the Vertigo budget sampler double album Suck It and See, along with tracks by then-labelmates Kraftwerk, Jade Warrior and the Sensational Alex Harvey Band, amongst others.
Most SingStar games are loosely based upon musical genres, such as rock or pop music (SingStar Rocks! and SingStar Pop respectively). Artist-specific SingStar games have been released, featuring artists such as ABBA, Queen, Take That, Die Toten Hosen, Kent and Mecano.
"Rockin' Roll Baby" is a song written by Linda Creed and Thom Bell and performed by The Stylistics. It reached #3 on the U.S. R&B chart, #6 on the UK Singles Chart, #14 on the U.S. pop chart, #44 on the U.S. adult contemporary chart, and #57 on the Canadian pop chart in 1974. [1] It was featured as the title song from their 1973 eponymous album ...
Johnnie Louise Richardson (June 29, 1935, Montgomery, Alabama - October 25, 1988, New York City) [1] and Joe Rivers (March 20, 1937, Charleston, South Carolina) [2] began singing together in 1957 and released several singles on Chess Records, [3] which were leased from J & S Records, to whom the duo were under contract.